“She’s not negotiating for me,” Hoyer, the No. 2 House Democrat, said tersely during a press briefing in the Capitol.

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His comments underscore the divisions emerging between Democratic leaders and other factions of the caucus as Pelosi seeks to win over some of her detractors before a Jan. 3 floor vote for Speaker.

The discord revealed itself in animated fashion during a closed-door meeting of the House Democratic Caucus in the Capitol basement Tuesday morning, when both sides made their case on the question of whether the party should adopt term limits for chairmanships and leadership posts.

The opposition is particularly pronounced within the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), whose members are poised to lead a handful of powerful committees next year. CBC leaders suggested there’s a racial element behind the effort to limit chairmanships.

“We have so much work to do. [Republicans] have not governed over the last two years — that needs to be our priority,” Bass said. “We don’t need to take up an issue that’s going to cause us to have conflict between each other.”

Pelosi, 78, has been in talks with members of an insurgent group of lawmakers, including Perlmutter, about ensuring a transition to a younger generation of Democratic leaders.

Those talks have centered on the adoption of term limits for both committee heads and leadership posts — changes to which Pelosi says she is “sympathetic.”

Yet the proposal has drawn howls from other powerful voices within the caucus, including Hoyer and Rep. James Clyburn (S.C.), the third-ranking Democrat in the House. Both panned the proposal, with Hoyer saying the concept is inherently undemocratic.

“I am against term limits because I have a term limit. It’s a two-year term limit. And every [cycle], the citizens that I represent and the members in this House have to re-up my contract,” Hoyer said. “So I am for the intellect of the voter, whether it’s my constituency or my colleagues, being able to operate without such a constraint and choose whom they want, when they want for leadership or representation.”

Although there was no resolution to the term-limit debate at Tuesday’s caucus meeting, both sides have agreed to strip any term-limit language from a House rules package — which must be adopted by Jan. 3 — and resume the debate at a later, unspecified time.

The decision to push the debate beyond Jan. 3 would effectively divorce the term-limit discussion from the fight over Pelosi’s future at the top of the party.

“I think everybody now realizes you can’t avoid this discussion on term limits and you can’t kick the can down the road forever. There has to be a moment where people have this discussion [and] make their case,” McGovern said. “And whatever the caucus decides is what we’ll do.”

Pelosi can lose as many as 17 Democrats in the Speaker vote and still secure the gavel, but there are roughly 20 detractors — including a handful of incoming freshmen — who are vowing to oppose her.

By supporting term limits, Pelosi may be able to pick up some additional support. But she also risks losing some of her backers, particularly within the CBC.

The push for term limits is an extension of the broader effort by a restive group of newer members to gain more power within a caucus that’s been led by Pelosi since 2003. The reformers argue the need “to keep the blood circulating” with fresh faces and new ideas, in the words of Kind.

Others who were once receptive to term limits have had a change of heart after a few years in the Capitol.

Jeffries on Tuesday outlined the process, to begin with his appointment of a new leader of the Democrats’ internal rules committee, which is soon to be vacated by Bass. Jeffries said he would name that person “shortly,” and the committee would then hear arguments on both sides of the term-limit debate.

“I’m not going to put a timeline on it one way or the other, because we’ll also need to engage the entire caucus of the 116th Congress to have that discussion,” he said. “And that’s not something we can do until everyone reassembles in January.”